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Writer's pictureTravis Uresk

When was the first school shooting ever recorded?

Updated: Jul 1


Posted by Travis Uresk | May 30th, 2023 | School Shootings |


5/30/23


This might surprise many of you, but school shootings are not anything new. The first school shooting ever recorded was in 1764. It was the Pontiac's Rebellion school massacre. On July 26, 1764, four Lenape American Indians entered the schoolhouse near present-day Greencastle, Pennsylvania, shot and killed Schoolmaster Enoch Brown, and killed nine or ten children (reports vary). Only two children survived.

This is what the mainstream media, the Government, and anti-gun left-wing people don't know and don't want you to know. They fail to mention that this has been happening for over 200 years, and more gun laws will not stop this. There were fewer guns in the 1700 and 1800s than there are today, and there will always be mass shootings in schools and in buildings where guns are not allowed.

In one of these stories, the person used dynamite to blow up a school to kill a bunch of people inside. It's not the gun. It's the person. You can take away all the guns you want, and there will always be murder. People use knives, cars, explosives, ropes, hands, and whatever else they can find.


In the old west that's how things were settled, you stole something, you got shot, you cheated at poker, you got shot, and so on. Now it's more of a mental illness. It's easy for these people to get guns on the black market. They can't pass a background check so they hit the streets where they are easy to get. Criminals will always get and have guns, they don't care about the laws. So making more laws or taking law abiding citizens guns away will never fix the problem. It will just make it worse. Just look at Chicago and their gun laws. They have the toughest gun laws in the country but have one of the highest crime and murder rates.


Now with the border being wide open there are going to be more illegal guns on our streets that are not on record and in the system to keep track of. But somehow it's the legal gun owners fault that use guns to hunt, target shoot, or have them in their homes to protect themselves and their families from the criminals that get them illegally.

1800s

November 2, 1853, in Louisville, Kentucky, a student, Matthew Ward, bought a self-cocking pistol in the morning, went to school, and killed Schoolmaster Mr. Butler for excessively punishing his brother the day before. Even though he shot the Schoolmaster point blank in front of his classmates, he was acquitted.

An April 30, 1866 editorial in the New York Times argued against students carrying pistols, citing "...pistols being dropped on the floor at balls or being exploded in very inconvenient ways. A boy of 12 has his pantaloons made with a pistol pocket, and this is at a boarding school filled with boys who, we suppose, do or wish to do the same thing. We would advise parents to look into it and learn whether a shooting is to be a part of the scholastic course which may be practiced on their boys, or else we advise them to see that their own boys are properly armed with the most approved and deadly-pistol and that there may be an equal chance at least of their shooting as of being shot."

June 8, 1867, New York City At Public School No. 18, a 13-year-old lad brought a pistol loaded and capped without the knowledge of his parents or school teachers and shot and injured a fellow classmate.

December 22, 1868, Chattanooga, Tennessee A boy who refused to be whipped and left school returned with his brother and a friend the next day to seek revenge on his teacher. Not finding the teacher at the school, they continued to his house, where a gun battle rang out, leaving three dead. Only the brother survived.

March 9, 1873, Salisbury, Maryland After school, as Miss Shockley was walking with four small children, she was approached by Mr. Hall and shot. The Schoolmaster ran out, but she was dead instantly. Hall threw himself under a train that night.

May 24, 1879, Lancaster, New York As the carriage loaded with female students was pulling out of the school's stables, Frank Shugart, a telegraph operator shot and severely injured Mr. Carr, Superintendent of the stables.

March 6, 1884, Boston, Massachusetts. As news of Jesse James reached the east coast, young kids started to act in the same manner. An article from the New York Times reads, "Another "Jesse James" Gang - "Word was brought to the Fifth Police Station tonight that a number of boys were using the Concord-street School-house for some unknown purpose, and a posse of officers was sent to investigate. The gang scattered at the approach of the police and, in their flight on, drew a revolver and fired at Officer Rowan, without effect, however. William Nangle, age 14, and Sidney Duncan, age 12, were captured, but the other five or six escaped, among them the one who did the shooting. The boys refused to disclose the object of their meeting, but it is thought that another "Jesse James" organization has been broken up."

March 15, 1884, Gainsville, Georgia. In the middle of the day, a group of very drunk Jackson County farmers left the Jug Tavern, drinking and shooting their revolvers as they headed down the street, driving people into their homes. As they approached the female academy, the girls fled the schoolyard into the school, where the gang followed, swearing and shooting, firing several rounds into the front door. No one was hurt.

July 4, 1886, Charleston, South Carolina During Sunday school, Emma Connelly shot and killed John Steedley for "circulating slanderous reports" about her, even though her brother publicly whipped him a few days earlier.

April 12, 1887, in Watertown, New York, Edwin Bush, a student a the Potsdam Normal School, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.

June 12, 1887, in Cleveland, Tennessee, Will Guess went to the school and fatally shot Miss Irene Fann, his little sister's teacher, for whipping her the day before.

June 13, 1889, in New Brunswick, New Jersey, Charles Crawford, upset over an argument with a school Trustee, went up to the window and fired a pistol into a crowded school room. The bullet lodged in the wall just above the teacher's head.

The first known mass shooting in the U.S. where students were shot was on April 9, 1891, when 70 year old, James Foster fired a shotgun at a group of students in the playground of St. Mary's Parochial School, Newburgh, New York, causing minor injuries to several of the students. The majority of attacks during this time period by students on other students or teachers usually involved stabbing with knives or hitting with stones.

1900-1930s

There are very seldom reports of mass or multiple school shootings during the first three decades of the 20th Century, with the three most violent attacks on schools involving either arson or explosions.

February 26, 1902, Camargo, Illinois teacher Fletcher R. Barnett shot and killed another teacher, Eva C. Wiseman, in front of her class at a school near Camargo, Illinois. After shooting at a pupil who came to help Miss Wiseman and wounding himself in a failed suicide attempt, he waited in the classroom until a group of farmers came to lynch him. He then ran out of the school building, grabbed a shotgun from one of the farmers, and shot himself before running away and leaping into a well, where he finally drowned. The incident was likely sparked by Wiseman's refusal to marry Barnett.

February 24, 1903, in Inman, South Carolina, Edward Foster, a 17-year-old student at Inman High School, was shot and fatally wounded by his teacher Reuben Pitts after he had jerked a rod from Pitts' hands to resist punishment. According to the teacher, Foster struck the pistol Pitts had drawn to defend himself, thus causing its discharge. Pitts was later acquitted of murder.

October 10, 1906, in Cleveland, Ohio, Harry Smith shot and killed 22-year-old teacher Mary Shepard at South Euclid School after she had rejected him. Smith escaped and committed suicide in a barn near his home two hours later.

March 23, 1907, Carmi, Illinois George Nicholson shot and killed John Kurd at a schoolhouse outside of Carmi, Illinois, during a school rehearsal. The motive for the shooting was Kurd making a disparaging remark about Nicholson's daughter during her recital.

March 11, 1908, in Boston, Massachusetts, Elizabeth Bailey Hardee was shot to death by Sarah Chamberlain Weed at the Laurens School, a finishing school in Boston. Weed then turned the gun on herself and committed suicide.

April 15, 1908, in Asheville, North Carolina, Dr. C. O. Swinney shot and fatally wounded his 16-year-old daughter Nellie in a reception room at Normal and Collegiate Institute. He then committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.

February 12, 1909, in San Francisco, California, 10-year-old Dorothy Malakanoff was shot and killed by 49-year-old Demetri Tereaschinko as she arrived at her school in San Francisco. Tereaschinko then shot himself in a failed suicide attempt. Tereaschinko was reportedly upset that Malakanoff refused to elope with him.

January 10, 1912, in Warrenville, Illinois, Sylvester E. Adams shot and killed teacher Edith Smith after she rejected his advances. Adams then shot and killed himself. The incident occurred in a schoolhouse about a mile outside Warrenville after the students had been dismissed for the day.

March 27, 1919, in Lodi Township, Michigan, 19-year-old teacher Irma Casler was shot and killed in her classroom at Rentschler school in Lodi Township, Michigan, by Robert Warner, apparently because she had rejected his advances.

April 2, 1921, Syracuse, New York Professor Holmes Beckwith shot and killed Dean J. Herman Wharton in his office at Syracuse University before committing suicide.

May 18, 1927, Bath, Michigan School treasurer Andrew Kehoe, after killing his wife and destroying his house and farm, blew up the Bath Consolidated School by detonating dynamite in the basement of the school, killing 38 people, mostly children. He then pulled up to the school in his Ford car, then blew the car up, killing himself and four others. Only one shot was fired in order to detonate the dynamite in the car. This was the deadliest act of mass murder at a school in the United States.

February 15, 1933, in Downey, California, Dr. Vernon Blythe shot and killed his wife Eleanor, as well as his 8-year-old son Robert at Gallatin grammar school and committed suicide after firing three more shots at his other son Vernon. His wife, who had been a teacher at the school, had filed for divorce the week before.

September 14, 1934, Gill, Massachusetts. Headmaster Elliott Speer was murdered by a shotgun blast through the window of his study at Northfield Mount Hermon School. The crime was never solved.

December 12, 1935, in New York City, New York, Victor Koussow, a Russian laboratory worker at the School of Dental and Oral Surgery, shot Prof. Arthur Taylor Rowe, Prof. Paul B. Wiberg, and wounded Dr. William H. Crawford at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, before committing suicide.

April 27, 1936, in Lincoln, Nebraska, Prof. John Weller shot and wounded Prof. Harry Kurz in a corridor of the University of Nebraska, apparently because of his impending dismissal at the end of the semester. After the shooting, Kurz Weller tried to escape but was surrounded by police on the campus, whereupon he killed himself with a shot in the chest.

June 4, 1936, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, Wesley Crow shot and killed his Lehigh University English instructor, C. Wesley Phy. Crow went to Phy's office and demanded that Mr. Phy change his grade to a passing mark. Crow committed suicide after shooting Phy.

September 24, 1937, in Toledo, Ohio, 12-year-old Robert Snyder shot and wounded his Principal, June Mapes, in her office at Arlington public school when she declined his request to call a classmate. He then fled the school grounds and shot and wounded himself.

1940s

May 6, 1940, South Pasadena, California. After being removed as Principal of South Pasadena Junior High School, Verlin Spencer shot six school officials, killing five, before attempting to commit suicide by shooting himself in the stomach.

May 23, 1940: New York City, New York Infuriated by a grievance, Matthew Gillespie, 62-year-old janitor at the junior school of the Dwight School for Girls, shot and critically wounded Mrs. Marshall Coxe, secretary of the junior school.

July 4, 1940: Valhalla, New York. Angered by the refusal of his daughter, Melba, 15 years old, to leave a boarding school and return to his home, Joseph Moshell, 47, visited the school and shot and killed the girl.

September 12, 1940, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, 29-year-old teacher Carolyn Dellamea is shot to death inside her third-grade classroom by 35-year-old William Kuhns. Kuhns then shot himself in the chest in a failed suicide attempt. Kuhns had reportedly been courting Dellamea for over a year, but the relationship was ended when Dellamea discovered that Kuhns was already married.

October 2, 1942: New York City, New York "Erwin Goodman, a 36-year-old mathematics teacher of William J. Gaynor Junior High School, was shot and killed in the school corridor by a youth...

February 23, 1943: Port Chester, NY Harry Wyman, 13-year-old, shot himself dead at the Harvey School, a boys' preparatory school.

June 26, 1946: Brooklyn, New York A 15-year-old schoolboy who balked at turning over his pocket money to a gang of seven Negro youths was shot in the chest at 11:30 a.m. yesterday in the basement of the Public School 147 annex of the Brooklyn High School for Automotive Trades.

November 24, 1946: In New York City, A 13-year-old student at St. Benedict's Parochial School shot and fatally wounded himself while sitting in an audience watching a school play.

December 24, 1948: New York City A 14-year-old boy was wounded fatally by an accidental shot from the .22-caliber rifle of a fellow student. The youth was shot in the head when he chanced into a range where Robert Ross, 17, of Brooklyn, was shooting at a target near a lake on the school property.

March 11, 1949: New York City, A 16-year-old student at Stuyvesant High School, was accidentally shot in the arm by a fellow student who was 'showing off' with a pistol in a classroom.

November 13, 1949, Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State University freshman James Heer grabbed a .45 caliber handgun from the room of a Delta Tau Delta fraternity brother and shot and killed his fraternity brother Jack McKeown, 21, an Ohio State senior.

1950s

July 22, 1950, New York City, New York A 16-year-old boy was shot in the wrist and abdomen at the Public School 141 dance during an argument with a former classmate.

November 27, 1951, in New York City, New York, David Brooks, a 15-year-old student, was fatally shot as fellow pupils looked on in a grade school.

April 9, 1952, New York City, New York A 15-year-old boarding school student shot a dean rather than relinquish pin-up pictures of girls in bathing suits.

July 14, 1952, in New York City, New York, Bayard Peakes walked into the offices of the American Physical Society at Columbia University and shot and killed secretary Eileen Fahey with a .22 caliber pistol. Peakes was reportedly upset that the APS had rejected his pamphlet.

September 3, 1952, in Lawrenceville, Illinois, After 25-year-old Georgine Lyon ended her engagement with Charles Petrach, Petrach shot and killed Lyon in a classroom at Lawrenceville High School, where she worked as a librarian.

November 20, 1952, New York City, New York "Rear Admiral E. E. Herrmann, 56 years old, the Naval Post-Graduate School superintendent, was found dead in his office with a bullet in his head. A service revolver was found by his side.

October 2, 1953, in Chicago, Illinois, 14-year-old Patrick Colletta was shot to death by 14-year-old Bernice Turner in a classroom at Kelly High School in Chicago. It was reported that after Turner refused to date Colletta, he handed her the gun and dared her to pull the trigger, telling her that the gun was "only a toy." A coroner's jury later ruled that the shooting was an accident.

October 8, 1953: New York City, New York Larry Licitra, a 17-year-old student at the Machine and Metal Trades High School, was shot and slightly wounded in the right shoulder in the lobby of the school while inspecting a handmade pistol owned by one of several students.

On May 15, 1954, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Putnam Davis Jr. was shot and killed during a fraternity house carnival at the Phi Delta Theta house at the University of North Carolina. William Joyner and Allen Long were shot and wounded during the exchange of gunfire in their fraternity bedroom. The incident took place after an all-night beer party. Mr. Long reported to the police that, while the three were drinking beer at 7 a.m., Davis pulled out a gun and started shooting with a gun he had obtained from the car of a former roommate.

January 11, 1955, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania After some of his dorm mates urinated on his mattress Bob Bechtel, a 20-year-old student at Swarthmore College, returned to his dorm with a shotgun and used it to shoot and kill fellow student Holmes Strozier.

April 17, 1956, in New York City, New York, 18-year-old Henry Smith, a student at a Bronx vocational high school, is stabbed to death by 16-year-old Randolph Lawrence, a fellow student. The stabbing was reportedly sparked over a dispute about a basketball game.

On May 4, 1956, in Prince George's County, Maryland, 15-year-old student Billy Prevatte fatally shot one teacher and injured two others at Maryland Park Junior High School in Prince George's County after he had been reprimanded from the school.

October 20, 1956: New York City, New York A junior high school student was wounded in the forearm yesterday by another student armed with a homemade weapon at Booker T. Washington Junior High School.

October 2, 1957: New York City, New York "A 16-year old student was shot in the leg yesterday by a 15-year old classmate at a city high school."

March 4, 1958: New York City, New York "A 17-year-old student shot a boy in the Manual Training High School."

May 1, 1958: Massapequa, New York A 15-year-old high school freshman was shot and killed by a classmate in the washroom of the Massapequa High School.

September 24, 1959: New York City, New York Twenty-seven men, boys, and an arsenal were seized in the Bronx last night as the police headed off a gang war resulting from the fatal shooting of a teenager Monday at Morris High School.


1960s

February 2, 1960, Hartford City, Indiana Principal Leonard Redden shot and killed two teachers with a shotgun at William Reed Elementary School in Hartford City, Indiana, before fleeing into a remote forest, where he committed suicide.

June 7, 1960, in Blaine, Minnesota, Lester Betts, a 40-year-old mail carrier, walked into the office of 33-year-old principal Carson Hammond and shot him to death with a 12-gauge shotgun.

April 20, 1961, Chicago, Illinois Teacher Josephine Keane, 45, is sexually assaulted and stabbed to death inside a storeroom at Lewis-Champlin elementary school in Chicago. Lee Arthur Hester, a 14-year-old student, is later convicted of the murder and sentenced to 55 years in prison.

October 17, 1961, in Denver, Colorado, Tennyson Beard, 14, got into an argument with William Hachmeister, 15, at Morey Junior High School. During the argument, Beard pulled out a .38 caliber revolver and shot at Hachmeister, wounding him. A stray bullet also struck Deborah Faith Humphrey, 14, who died from her gunshot wound.

August 1, 1966, the University of Texas Massacre Charles Whitman climbs atop the observation deck at the University of Texas-Austin, killing 16 people and wounding 31 during a 96-minute shooting rampage.

November 12, 1966, in Mesa, Arizona, Bob Smith, 18, took seven people hostage at Rose-Mar College of Beauty, a school for training beauticians. Smith ordered the hostages to lie down on the floor in a circle. He then proceeded to shoot them in the head with a 22-caliber pistol. Four women and a three-year-old girl died. One woman and a baby were injured but survived. Police arrested Smith after the massacre. Smith had reportedly admired Richard Speck and Charles Whitman.

January 30, 1968, in Miami, Florida, 16-year-old Blanche Ward shot and killed fellow student Linda Lipscomb, 16, with a .22-caliber pistol at Miami Jackson High School. According to Ward, she was threatened with a razor by Lipscomb during an argument over a fountain pen, and in the ensuing struggle, the gun went off.

February 8, 1968, Orangeburg, South Carolina In the days leading up to February 8, 1968, about 200 mostly student protesters gathered on the campus of South Carolina State University, located in the city of Orangeburg, to protest the segregation of the All Star Bowling Lane. The bowling alley was owned by the late Harry K. Floyd. That night, students started a bonfire. As police attempted to put out the fire, an officer was injured by a thrown piece of banister. The police said they believed they were under attack by small weapons fire. The officers fired into the crowd, killing three young men: Samuel Hammond, Delano Middleton, and Henry Smith, and wounding twenty-seven others.

May 22, 1968, Miami, Florida Ernest Lee Grissom, a 15-year-old student at Drew Junior High School, shot and seriously wounded a teacher and a 13-year-old student after he had been reprimanded for causing a disturbance.

January 17, 1969, in Los Angeles, California, Two student members of the Black Panther Party, Apprentice Carter and John Huggins, were fatally shot during a student meeting inside Campbell Hall at the University of California, Los Angeles. The motive of the shooting regarded who would own the school's African American Studies Center. The shooter, Claude Hubert, was never to be found, but three other men were arrested in connection with the shooting.

November 19, 1969, Tomah, Wisconsin Principal Martin Mogensen is shot to death in his office by a 14-year-old boy armed with a 20 gauge shotgun.


1970s

The two most notable U.S. school shootings in the early 1970s were the Jackson State killings in May 1970, where police opened fire on the campus of Jackson State University, and the Kent State shootings also in

In May 1970, where the National Guard opened fire on the campus of Kent State University.

The mid to late 1970s is considered the second most violent period in U.S. school history with a series of school shootings, most notably were;

December 30, 1974, in Olean, New York, Anthony Barbaro, a 17-year-old Regents scholar armed with a rifle and shotgun, kills three adults and wounds 11 others at his high school, which was closed for the Christmas holiday. Barbaro was reportedly a loner who kept a diary describing several "battle plans" for his attack on the school.

June 12, 1976, California State University, Fullerton massacre, where the school's custodian opened fire with a semiautomatic rifle in the library on the California State University, Fullerton campus killing 7 and wounding 2.

February 22, 1978, Lansing, Michigan. After being taunted for his beliefs, a 15-year-old self-proclaimed Nazi kills one student and wounds a second with a Luger pistol.

January 29, 1979, Grover Cleveland Elementary School Shootings, California, where a 16yr old girl opened fire with the rifle, a gift from her father, killing 2 and wounding 9.


1980s

The early 1980s saw only a few multi-victim school shootings including;

January 20, 1983, in St. Louis County, Missouri, the Parkway South Middle School eighth-grader brought a blue duffel bag containing two pistols and a murder/suicide note that outlined his intention to kill the next person heard speaking ill of his older brother Ken. He entered a study hall classroom and opened fire, hitting two fellow students. The first victim was fatally shot in the stomach, and the second victim received a non-fatal gunshot wound to the abdomen. Then he said, "No one will ever call my brother a pussy again," and then committed suicide.

According to the Center to Prevent Handgun Violence, in the United States, from

September 1986 to September 1990 (four-year period):

At least 71 people (65 students and 6 school employees) had been killed with guns at school.

201 were severely wounded by gunfire.

242 individuals were held hostage at gunpoint.

According to a 1987 survey conducted by the American School Health Association," 3% of the boys reported having carried a handgun to school at least once during the school year; 1% reported carrying a handgun on a daily basis."

The late 1980s began to see a major increase in school shootings including;

September 4, 1985, Richmond, Virginia At the end of the second day of school from the East End Middle School, a 12yr old boy shot a girl with his mother's gun.

October 18, 1985, Detroit, Michigan, During halftime of the homecoming football game between Northwestern High School and Murray-Wright High School. A boy who was in a fight earlier that day pulled out a shotgun and opened fire, injuring six students.

November 26, 1985, Spanaway, Washington A 14yr old girl shot two boys dead and then killed herself with a .22-caliber rifle at the Spanaway Junior High School.

December 9, 1985, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania At the Archbishop Ryan High School for Boys, a 22yr old Mental health patient took 6 students hostage with what ended up being a starter pistol. No one was hurt in the ordeal.

December 10, 1985, Portland, Connecticut At the Portland Junior High School, the Principal was having a heated discussion with a 13-year-old male eighth-grader when he locked the boy inside an office. The student then pulled out a 9mm assault rifle and opened fire. The bullet shattered the glass door and struck the left forearm of the secretary, and the glass injured the Principal. The boy fled for the 2nd floor, where he encountered the janitor and he shot him in the head. The boy then took a seventh-grader hostage. The boy's father and another family member came to the school and talked to him over the intercom system. After 45 minutes, he tossed the gun out a school window and was taken into custody.

May 16, 1986, The Cokeville Elementary School hostage crisis In a ransom scheme, David and Doris Young, both in their forties, took 150 students and teachers hostage on this spring day. Their demand for $300 million dollars came to an abrupt end when Doris accidentally set off a bomb, killing herself and injuring 78 students and teachers. David wounded John Miller, a teacher who was trying to flee, then killed himself.

March 2, 1987, in Missouri, an honors student Nathan Ferris, 12, killed a classmate and then himself.

On May 20, 1988, in Winnetka, Illinois 30yr old Laurie Dann shot and killed one boy, and wounded five other kids, in an elementary school, then took a family hostage and shot a man before killing herself.

September 26, 1988, Greenwood, South Carolina In the cafeteria of the Oakland Elementary School, 19-year-old James William Wilson Jr. shot and killed Shequilla Bradley, 8, and wounded eight other children with a 9-round .22 caliber pistol. He went into the girl's restroom to reload, where he was attacked by Kat Finkbeiner, a Physical Education teacher. James shot her in the hand and mouth. He then entered a 3rd-grade classroom and wounded six more students.

December 16, 1988, in Virginia Beach, Virginia, Nicholas Elliott, 15, opened fire with an SWD Cobray M-11 semiautomatic pistol on his teachers at the Atlantic Shores Christian School. His first shots struck teacher Karen Farley in the arm; when she went down, he killed her at point-blank range. Nicholas then injured Sam Marino. He turned the Cobray toward his classmates, but the gun jammed, and he was quickly subdued by M. Hutchinson Matteson, a teacher before he could fire another round.

January 17, 1989, Cleveland School massacre of Stockton, California, where 5 school children were killed and 29 wounded by a single gunman firing over 100 rounds into a schoolyard from an AK-47


1990s

From the late 1980s to the early 1990s, the United States saw a sharp increase in gun and gun violence in schools. According to a survey conducted by The Harvard School of Public Health, "15% said that they had carried a handgun on their person in the past 30 days, and 4% said that they had taken a handgun to school in the past year." a sharp increase from just five years earlier. By 1993, the United States saw some of the most violent time school shooting incidences.

On May 1, 1992, in Olivehurst, California, Eric Houston, 20, killed four people and wounded 10 in an armed siege at his former high school. Prosecutors said the attack was in retribution for a failing grade.

According to the National School Safety Center, since the 1992-1993 U.S. school year, there has been a significant decline in school-associated violent deaths (deaths on private or public school property for kindergarten through grade 12 and resulting from schools functions or activities):

1992-1993 (44 Homicides and 55 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1993-1994 (42 Homicides and 51 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1994-1995 (17 Homicides and 20 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1995-1996 (29 Homicides and 35 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1996-1997 (23 Homicides and 25 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1997-1998 (35 Homicides and 40 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

1998-1999 (25 Homicides from school shootings in the U.S.)

1999-2000 (25 Homicides from school shootings in the U.S.)

According to the U.S. Department of Education, in the 1998-1999 School Year, 3,523 Students (57% High School, 33% Junior High, 10% Elementary) were expelled for bringing a firearm to school.


The late 1990s started to see a major reduction in gun-related school violence, but was still plagued with multiple victim shootings, including;

October 12, 1995, Blackville, South Carolina A suspended student shot two math teachers with a .32 caliber revolver.

November 15, 1995, Lynnville, Tennessee A seventeen-year-old boy shot and killed a student and teacher with a .22 rifle.

February 2, 1996, Moses Lake, Washington Two students and one teacher were killed, and one other wounded when 14-year-old Barry Loukaitis opened fire on his algebra class.

February 19, 1997, Bethel, Alaska Principal, and one student were killed, and two others wounded by Evan Ramsey, 16.

October 1, 1997, Pearl, Mississippi Two students were killed and seven wounded by Luke Woodham, 16, who was also accused of killing his mother. He and his friends were said to be outcasts who worshiped Satan.

December 1, 1997, West Paducah, Kentucky Three students were killed, five wounded by Michael Carneal, 14, as they participated in a prayer circle at Heath High School.

December 15, 1997, Stamps, Arkansas. Two students were wounded. Colt Todd, 14, was hiding in the woods when he shot the students as they stood in the parking lot.

March 24, 1998, in Jonesboro, Arkansas, Four students and one teacher were killed, and ten others were wounded outside as Westside Middle School emptied during a false fire alarm. Mitchell Johnson, 13, and Andrew Golden, 11, shot at their classmates and teachers from the woods.

April 24, 1998, Edinboro, Pennsylvania One teacher, John Gillette, killed two students wounded at a dance at James W. Parker Middle School. Andrew Wurst, 14, was charged.

May 21, 1998, Springfield, Oregon Two students were killed and 22 others wounded in the cafeteria at Thurston High School by 15-year-old Kip Kinkel. Kinkel had been arrested and released a day earlier for bringing a gun to school. His parents were later found dead at home

June 15, 1998, Richmond, Virginia One teacher and one guidance counselor were wounded by a 14-year-old boy in the school hallway.

April 20, 1999, in Littleton, Colorado, 14 students (including shooters) and one teacher were killed, and 27 others wounded at Columbine High School in the nation's deadliest school shooting. Eric Harris, 18, and Dylan Klebold, 17, had plotted for a year to kill at least 500 and blow up their school. At the end of their hour-long rampage, they turned their guns on themselves.

May 20, 1999, Conyers, Georgia Six students were injured at Heritage High School by Thomas Solomon, 15, who was reportedly depressed after breaking up with his girlfriend.


2000 - 2010

2000-2001 (19 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2001-2002 (4 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2002-2003 (14 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2003-2004 (29 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2004-2005 (20 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2005-2006 (5 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2006-2007 (38 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2007-2008 (3 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2008-2009 (10 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)

2009-2010 (5 Deaths resulting from school shootings in the U.S.)


The University of Texas Tower shooting

Source: Abc 13


AUSTIN, Texas (KTRK) -- It's been over 55 years since a University of Texas student and Marine-trained sniper climbed to the top of the UT tower and began shooting, marking the beginning of what many consider to be the first mass shooting in United States history.

On August 1, 1966, 16 people died, including the gunman's wife and his mother, both of whom he had killed before his rampage from high above the Austin landscape.

A 17th person was added to the death toll years later in 2001 when the victim died from complications related to his injuries from that day.

Charles Whitman took rifles, pistols, and a sawed-off shotgun to the observation deck of the clock tower and opened fire as unsuspecting students walked along the campus grounds below.


Charles Whitman (1963)

Rick Cloud was on campus that day and remembered the violence. He told the Texas Standard's Laura Rice that he thought the commotion was a military exercise outside.

"I think about it every August," Cloud said. "For my generation, it's when Kennedy was killed, and this is one on a personal level that I'll always remember."

Thirty-one people were injured during the ordeal.

The violence ended when two Austin police officers, Houston McCoy and Ramiro Martinez, along with two other men, made it to the observation deck and cornered Whitman before shooting him to death.

The university unveiled a memorial to the victims in 2016 and dedicated an existing garden just north of the tower as a tribute.

The shooting brought about major changes at UT, including the formation of the first campus police force and changes to mental health services, according to a UT History Department compilation from 2016.


KTBC News UT Tower Shooting Special Report | Austin, TX 1966



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